SEP  23  1952 

LIBRARY 

QQVT*  PUBS'  R^Mi  of  November  16,  1912 


g|   United  States  Department  of  Agriculture, 


DIVISION  OF  PUBLICATIONS— Circular  13. 
JOS.  A,  ARNOLD,  Editor  in  Chief. 

Washington,  D.  C,  November  11,  1912. 


PUBLICATIONS  OF  THE  BUREAU  OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

NOTE. — Application  for  pnblleatlong  In  this  list  should  be  made  to  the  Editor  and  Chief  of  the 
Division  of  Publications,  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture,  Washington,  D.  C.  The  editions 
of  some  of  the  publications  are  necessarily  limited,  and  rrhen  the  supply  is  exhausted  and  no 
funds  are  available  for  procuring  additional  copies,  applicants  are  referred  to  the  Superintendent 
of  Documents,  Government  Printing  OfDce,  ^vho  has  them  for  sale  at  a  nominal  price,  under  the 
law  of  January  12,  1895.  Applicants  are  urgently  requested  to  ask  only  for  those  publications  la 
which  they  are  particularly  Interested.  The  department  can  not  undertake  to  supply  complete 
sets,  nor  la  It  allowable  to  send  more  than  one  copy  of  any  publication  to  an  applicant. 

REPORTS. 

Report  of  the  Chief  for  1901. 

Same,  1906.  Same,  1908.  Same,  19]  0. 

Same.  1907.  Same,  1909. 

BULLETINS. 

[In  applying  for  these  bulletins  the  name  of  the  bureau  as  well  as  the  number  of  the 
bulletin  should  be  given,  as  "Bureau  of  Plant  Industry,  Bulletin  No.  6."] 

Bill.     6.  A  List  of  American  Varieties  of  Peppers. 

10.  Records  of  Seed  Distribution  and  Cooperative  Experiments  with  Grasses 

and  Forage  Plants. 
25.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  I.  The  Seeds  of  Rescue  Grass  and  Chess.    II. 

Saragolla  Wheat.     III.  Plant  Introduction  Notes  from  South  Africa. 

IV.  Congressional  Seed  and  Plant  Distribution  Circulars,  1902-1903. 
31.  Cultivated  Forage  Crops  of  the  Northwestern  States. 
33.  North  American  Species  of  Leptochloa. 

51.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  Part  I.  The  Wilt  Disease  of  Tobacco  and  Its 
Control. 

Same,  Part  IV.  The  Cultivation  of  the  Australian  Wattle. 
53.  The  Date  Palm  and  its  Utilization  in  the  Southwestern  States. 
5(3.  The  Nomenclature  of  the  Apple. 
59.  Pasture,  Meadow,  and  Forage  Crops  in  Nebraska. 
62.  Notes  on  Egyptian  Agriculture. 
65.  Reclamation  of  Cape  Cod  Sand  Dunes. 
67.  Range  Investigations  in  Arizona. 

72.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  Part  I.  Cultivation  of  Wheat  In  Permanent 

Alfalfa  Fields. 

Same,  Part  II.  The  Salt  Water  Limits  of  Wild  Rice. 

73.  The  Development  of  Single-Germ  Beet  Seed. 

65012— CIr.  13—12 


2  PUBLICATIONS  OP  BUREAU  OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

Bui.   75.  Range  Maungeuient  lu  the  State  of  Washington. 

76.  Copper  as  an  Alglclde  and  Disinfectant  In  Water  Supplies. 

77.  The  Avocado,  a  Salad  Fruit  from  the  Tropics. 
82.  Grass  I^nds  of  the  South  Alaska  Coast. 

86.  Principles  of  Mushroom  Growing  and  Mushroom  Spawn  Making. 

86.  Agriculture  without  Irrigation  in  the  Sahara  Desert 

88.  Weevll-Reslstlng  Adaptations  of  the  Cotton  Plant 

01.  Varieties  of  Tobacco  Seed  Distributed  In  1905-6,  with  Cultural  Direc- 
tions. 

100.  Miscellaneous  Pai^rs:   Part  I.  Cranberry   Spraying   Exi)eriments  in 

IitUO* 

Same,  Part  III.  Garlicky  Wheat 

Same,  Part  IV.  Methods  of  Testing  the  Burning  Quality  of  Cigar  To- 
bacco. 

Same,  Part  VII.  The  Effects  of  Copper  upon  Water  Bacteria. 
102.  Miscellaneous   Papers:  Part   V.  The  Control   of  Texas  Root-Rot  of 
Cotton. 

Same,  Part  VI.  History  of  the  Cowpea  and  Its  Introduction  Into 
America. 

111.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  I.  The  Larkspurs  as  Poisonous  Planta    11.  The 
Fibers  of  Long-Staple  Upland  Cottons.     III.  Imported  Low-Grade 
Clover  and  Alfalfa  Seed.    IV.  Forage  Crops  for  Hogs  In  Kansas  and 
Okliihonm.     V.  The  Culture  aud  Uses  of  Brome-Grass. 
Same,  Part  I.    The  Larkspurs  as  Poisonous  Planta 
Same,  Part  II.  The  Fibers  of  Long-Staple  Upland  Cottons. 
Same,  Part  IV.  Forage  Crops  for  Hogs  in  Kansas  and  Oklahoma. 
119.  The  Mulberry  and  Other  Silkworm  Food  Plants. 

121.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  I.  The  Supposed  Relationship  of  White  Snake- 

root  to  Milksickness,  or  "Trembles."  IL  Mountain  I^aurel:  A 
Poisonous  Plant  III.  Results  of  Loco-Weed  Investigations  in  the 
Field  and  Laboratory  Work  on  Loco-Weed  Investigations.     IV.  The 

;  Sources  of  Arsenic  In  Certain  Samples  of  Dried  Hops.     V.  Apple 

Leaf-Spot  Caused  by  Sphaeropsis  Malorum.  VI.  The  Immunity  of 
the  Japanese  Chestnut  to  the  Bark  Disease. 

;  Same,   Part   I.  The   Supposed  Relationship  of  White   Snakeroot  to 

Milksickness  or  "Trembles." 
Same,  Part  II.  Mountain  Laurel :  A  Poisonous  Plant 

Same,  Part  IV.  The  sources  of  Arsenic  In  Certain  Samples  of  Dried 
Hops. 

Same,  Part  V.  Apple  Leaf-Spot  Caused  by  Sphaeropsis  Malorum. 

122.  Curly-Top,  a  Disease  of  the  Sugar  Beet 

123.  The  Decay  of  Oranges  While  In  Transit  from  California. 
127.  The  Improvement  of  Mountain  Meadows. 

129.  Barium,  a  Cause  of  the  Loco- Weed  Disease. 

131.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  I.  The  Germination  of  Vegetable  Seeds.  II. 
The  Botanical  History  and  Classification  of  Alfalfa.  III.  The  Cross- 
Inoculation  of  Fruit  Trees  and  Shrubs  with  Crown-Gall.  IV.  Re- 
cent Studies  of  the  OUve-Tubercle  Organism.  V.  The  Nectaries  of 
Cotton. 

Same,  Part  I.  The  Germination  of  Vegetable  Seeds. 
Same,  Part  II.  The  Botanical  History  and  Classification  of  Alfalfa. 
Same,  Part  III.  The  Cross-Inoculation  of  Fruit  Trees  and  Shrubs 
with  Crown-Gall. 

Same,  Part  V.  The  Nectaries  of  Cotton. 
185.  Orchard  Fruits  In  the  Piedmont  and  Blue  Ridge  Regions  of  Virginia 

and  the  South  Atlantic  States. 
137.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  January  1  to  March 

31,  1908.     Inventory  No.  14 ;  Nos.  21732  to  22510. 


'\I^V-.    -^f^OKD    /   P^ 


PUBLICATIONS   OF   BUREAU   OF   PLANT  INDUSTRY.  3 

BuL  141.  Miscellaneous  Papers:  I.  The  Relation  of  Nicotine  to  the  Burning 
Quality  of  Tobacco.  II.  The  Granville  Tobacco  Wilt.  III.  The 
Florida  Velvet  Bean  and  Its  History.  IV.  The  Importance  of  Broad 
Breeding  in  Corn.  V.  The  Present  Status  of  the  Chestnut-Bark 
Disease. 

Same,  Part  II.  The  Granville  Tobacco  Wilt. 

Same,  Part  III.  The  Florida  Velvet  Bean  and  Its  History. 

Same,  Part  IV.  The  Importance  of  Broad  Breeding  in  Corn. 

142.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  April  1  to  June 

30,  1908.     Inventory  No.  15 ;  Nos.  22511  to  23322. 

143.  Principles  and  Practical  Methods  of  Curing  Tobacco. 

144.  Apple  Blotch,  a  Serious  Disease  of  Southern  Orchards. 

145.  Vegetation  Affected  by  Agriculture  in  Central  America. 

147.  Suppressed  and  Intensified  Characters  in  Cotton  Hybrids. 

148.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  July  1  to  Septem- 

ber 30,  1908.     Inventory  No.  16 ;  Nos.  23323  to  23744. 

151.  Fruits  Recommended  by  the  American  Pomological  Society  for  Culti- 

vation in  the  Various  Sections  of  the  United  States  and  Canada. 

152.  The  Loose  Smuts  of  Barley  and  Wheat. 

153.  Seeds   and   Plants   Imported  during  the  Period  from   October   1   to 

December  31,  1908.     Inventory  No.  17 ;  Nos.  23745  to  24429. 

154.  Farm  Water  Supplies  of  Minnesota. 

156.  A  Study  of  Diversity  in  Egyptian  Cotton. 

157.  The  Truckee-Carson  Experiment  Farm. 

158.  The  Root-Rot  of  Tobacco  Caused  by  Thielavia  Basicola. 

162.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from   January  1   to 
March  31,  1909.     Inventory  No.  18 ;  Nos.  24430  to  25191. 

164.  Promising  Root  Crops  for  the  South.     I.  Yautias,  Taros,  and  Dasheens. 

II.  Agricultural  History  and  Utility  of  the  Cultivated  Aroids. 

165.  Application  of  Some  of  the  Principles  of  Heredity  to  Plant  Breeding. 
168.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  April  1  to  June 

30,  1909.     Inventory  No.  19 ;  Nos.  25192  to  25717. 

170.  Traction  Plowing. 

171.  Some  Fungous  Diseases  of  Economic  Importance.    I.  Miscellaneous 

Diseases.     II.  Pineapple  Rot  Caused  by  Thielaviopsis  Paradoxa. 

172.  Grape  Investigations  in  the  Vinifera  Regions  of  the  United  States 

with  Reference  to  Resistant  Stocks,  Direct  Producers,  and  Viniferas. 

173.  Seasonal  Nitrification  as  Infiuenced  by  Crops  and  Tillage. 

176.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  July  1  to  Septem- 
ber 30,  1909.     Inventory  No.  20 ;  Nos.  25718  to  26047. 

180.  Agricultural  and  Botanical  Explorations  in  Palestine. 

181.  The  Curly-Top  of  Beets. 

183.  Field  Studies  of  the  Crown-Gall  of  the  Grape. 

185.  Cold  Resistance  of  Alfalfa  and  Some  Factors  Influencing  It. 

189.  The   Source   of   the  Drug   Dioscorea,    with   a    Consideration    of   the 

Dioscoreae  Found  in  the  United  States. 

190.  Orchard  Green-Manure  Crops  in  California. 

191.  The  Value  of  First-Generation  Hybrids  in  Com. 

192.  The  Drought  Resistance  of  the  Olive  in  the  Southwestern  States. 

194.  Summer  Apples  in  the  Middle  Atlantic  States. 

195.  The  Production  of  Volajtile  Oils  and  Perfumery  Plants  in  the  United 

States. 

199.  The  Determination  of  the  Deterioration  of  Maize,  with  Incidental  Ref- 

erence to  Pellagra. 

200.  Breeding  New  Types  of  Egyptian  Cotton. 

201.  Natural  Vegetation  as  an  Indicator  of  the  Capabilities  of  Land  for 

Crop  Production  in  the  Great  Plains  Area. 


4  PUBUCATI0N8  OP  BUREAU  OP  PLANT  INDU8TBY. 

Bui.  202.  The  Seedllng-Innrch  and  Nurse-Plant  Methods  of  Propagation. 

204.  Agricultural  Explorations  In  the  Fruit  and  Nut  Orchards  of  China. 

205.  Seeds  and  Plants  IniiKjrtotl  during  the  Period  from  October  1  to  De- 

cember 31,  1900.     Inventory  No.  21 ;  Nos.  20048  to  20470. 

206.  The  Hllster  Rust  of  White  Pine. 

207.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  January  1  lu 

March  31.  1010.     Inventory  No.  22;  Nos.  20471  to  27480. 

208.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  April  1  to  June  30, 

1910.     Inventory  No.  23 ;  Noa  27481  to  28324. 

209.  Grimm  Alfalfa  and  Its  Utilization  in  the  Northwest. 

210.  Hindi  Cotton  in  Egypt. 

211.  Bacteriological    Studies  of   Soils  of   the  Truckee-Carson   Irrigation 

Project. 
214.  The  Timber  Rot  Caused  by  Lenzltes  Seplarla. 

216.  The  Rusts  of  Grains  In  the  United  States. 

217.  Root-Knot  and  Its  Control. 

220.  Relation  of  Drought  to  Weevil  Resistance  In  Cotton. 

221.  Dimorphic  Leaves  of  Cotton  and  Allied  Plants  In  Relation  to  Heredity. 

222.  Arrangement  of  Parts  In  the  Cotton  Plant. 

224.  Timothy  Rust  in  the  United  States. 

225.  A  Spot  Disease  of  Cauliflower. 

230.  The  Wilting  Coefficient  for  Different  Plants  and  Its  Indirect  Deter- 
mination. 

232.  A  Preliminary  Study  of  the  Forced  Curing  of  Lemons  as  Practiced  In 

California. 

233.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  January  1  to 

March  31,  1911.     Inventory  No.  2G ;  Nos.  29328  to  304G1. 

234.  The  Cultivation  and  Manufacture  of  Tea  in  the  United  States. 

235.  Wild  Volatile-Oil  Plants  and  Their  Economic  Importance:  I. — Black 

Sage;  II.— Wild  Sage;  III.— Swamp  Bay. 

236.  Farm  Management:  Organization  of  Research  and  Teaching. 

237.  Grain-Sorghum  Production  in  the  San  Antonio  Region  of  Texaa 

238.  The  Measure  of  the  Oxidase  Content  of  Plant  Juices. 

239.  Methods  and  Cost  of  Clearing  Land  In  Western  Washington. 

240.  Cooperative  Grain  Investigations  at  McPherson,  Kans. 

241.  The  Use  of  Artificial  Heat  In  Curing  Cigar-Leaf  Tobacco. 

242.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  April  1  to  June 

30,  1911.     Inventory  No.  27 ;  Nos.  30426  to  31370. 

243.  Heterozygosis  In  Evolution  and  In  Plant  Breeding. 

245.  Investigations  of  the  Potato  Fungus  Phytophtera  Infestana 

246.  The  Relation  of  Barium  to  the  Loco-Weed  Disease. 

247.  A  Knot  of  Citrus  Trees  Caused  by  Sphaeropsis  Tumefaciena 

248.  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  during  the  Period  from  July  1  to  Septem- 

ber 30,  1911.     Inventory  No.  28;  Nos.  31371  to  31938. 

249.  The  Branching  Habits  of  Egyptian  Cotton. 
260.  The  Diseases  of  Ginseng  and  Their  Control. 
251.  The  Pecan. 

257.  The  Weed  Factor  In  the  Cultivation  of  Com. 
259.  What  Is  Farm  Management? 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

[In  applying  for  these  publications  the  name  of  the  bureau  as  well  as  the  full  title  of 
the  publication  should  be  given.] 

A  New  Hollyhock  Disease.     (Reprint  from  the  Journal  of  Mycology,  Vol.  6, 

No.  2.) 
A  Disease  of  Almond  Trees.    Suggestions  In  Regard  to  the  Treatment  of  Cerco- 

spora  Clrcumscissn.     (Reprint  from  the  Journal  of  Mycology,  Vol.  7,  No.  2.) 


PUBLICATIONS   OF  BUREAU   OF   PLANT  INDUSTRY.  5 

Sugar-Beet  Pulp  as  Animal  Food.     (Reprint  from  Report  No.  74,  Office  of  the 
Secretary. ) 

Single-Germ  Beet  Balls  and  Other  Suggestions  for  Improving  Sugar-Beet  Cul- 
ture.     (Reprint  from  Report  No.  74,  Office  of  the  Secretary.) 

CIRCULARS. 

[In  applying  for  these  circulars  the  name  of  the  bureau  as  well  as  the  number  of  the 
circular  should  be  given,  as  "  Bureau  of  Plant  Industry,  Circular  No.  3."] 

Circ.    3.  Some  Stem  Tumors  or  Knots  on  Apple  and  Quince  Trees. 
■  6.  The  Cultivation  and  Handling  of  Goldenseal. 

8.  The  Smuts  of  Sorghum. 

9.  Texas  Root-Rot  of  Cotton :  Field  Experiments  in  1907. 
13.  The  Work  of  the  San  Antonio  Experiment  Farm  in  1907. 

15.  The  Fertilizing  Value  of  Hairy  Vetch  for  Connecticut  Tobacco  Fields. 
19.  The  Decay  of  Florida  Oranges  while  in  Transit  and  on  the  Market. 
22.  Farm  Methods  of  Applying  Land  Plaster  in  Western  Oregon  and  West- 
ern Washington. 

24.  Alfalfa  in  Cultivated  Rows  for  Seed  Production  in  Semiarid  Regions. 

29.  Experiments  with  Egyptian  Cotton  in  1908. 

30.  Improvement  of  the  Oat  Crop. 

31.  Notes  on  the  Number  and  Distribution  of  Native  Legumes  In  Nebraska 

and  Kansas. 

32.  Moisture  Content  and  Shrinkage  in  Grain. 

33.  The  Necessity  for  New  Standards  of  Hop  Valuation. 

36.  The  Bud-Rot  of  the  Coconut  Palm. 

37.  Comparative  Tests  of  Sugar-Beet  Varieties. 

40.  A  Simple  Method  for  Detecting  Sulphured  Barley  and  Oats. 

41.  The  South  African  Pipe  Calabash. 

43.  The  Deterioration  of  Corn  in  Storage. 

45.  The  Utilization  of  Pea-Cannery  Refuse  for  Forage. 

46.  The  Limitation  of  the  Satsuma  Orange  to  Trifoliate-Orange  Stock. 

47.  Prickly  Comfrey  as  a  Forage  Crop. 

•  48.  The  Present  Status  of  the  Tobacco  Industry. 

49.  Improvement  of  Pastures  in  Eastern  New  York  and  the  New  England 

States. 

50.  Three  Much-Misrepresented  Sorghums. 

51.  Fruit  Growing  for  Home  Use  in  the  Central  and  Southern  Great  Plains. 

54.  The  Substitution  of  Lime-Sulphur  Preparations  for  Bordeaux  Mixture 

in  the  Treatment  of  Apple  Diseases. 

55.  American  Export  Corn  (Maize)  in  Europe. 

56.  Some  Conditions  Influencing  the  Yield  of  Hops. 

57.  The  Cultivation  of  Hemp  in  the  United  States. 

58.  Experiments  on  the  Apple  with  Some  New  and  Little-Known  Fungi- 

cides. 

60.  Suggestions  to   Settlers  on   the   Sandy   Soils  of  the  Columbia  River 

Valley. 

61.  Dry-Land  Grains  in  the  Great  Basin. 

62.  The  Separation  of  Seed  Barley  by  the  Specific  Gravity  Method. 

63.  Methods  of  Legume  Inoculation. 

64.  Agricultural  Conditions  in  Southern  New  York. 

65.  Grape  Spraying  Experiments  in  Michigan. 

66.  Cotton  Selection  on  the  Farm  by  the  Characters  of  the  Stalks,  Leaves, 

and  Bolls. 
68.  Handling  Wheat  from  Field  to  Mill. 


6  PUBUCATIONS  OF  BUREAU  OP  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

Circ.    70.  Additional  Notes  on  the  Number  and  Distribution  of  Native  Legumes 
In  Nebraska  and  Kansas. 

71.  legume  Inoculation  and  the  Litmus  Reaction  of  Soils. 

72.  A  Moisture  Tester  for  Grain  and  Other  Substances  and  How  to  Use  It. 

73.  The  Distinguishing  Characters  of  the  Seetls  of  Quack-Grass  and  of 

Certain  Wheat-Grasses. 

74.  The  Sulphur  Bleaching  of  Commercial  Oats  and  Barley. 

7B.  Agricultural  Survey  of  Four  Townships  In  Southern  New  Hampshire. 

76.  The  Relation  of  Crown-Gall  to  Legimie  Inoculation. 

77.  A  Study  of  the  Improvement  of  Citrus  Fruits  Through  Bud  Selection. 

78.  Agricultural  Observations  on  the  Truckee-Carson  Irrigation  Project. 

79.  Winter  Wheat  In  Western  South  Dakota. 

80.  Forage  Crops  for  the  Sand-Hlll  Section  of  Nebraska. 

81.  The  Shrinkage  of  Corn  in  Storage. 

82.  Crop  Plants  for  Paper  Making. 

83.  Suggestions  to  Settlers  on  the  Belle  Fourche  Irrigation  Project 
86.  Preliminary  Report  on  the  Klamath  Marsh  Experiment  Farm. 
88.  The  Picking  and  Handling  of  Peanuts. 

90.  Suggestions  to  Potato  Growers  on  Irrigated  Lands. 

91.  The  Nematode  Gallworm  on   Potatoes  and  Other  Crop  Plants   in 

Nevada. 

92.  The  Control  of  Cotton  Wilt  and  Root  Knot. 

94.  The  Mangum  Terrace  in  Its  Relation  to  Efficient  Farm  Management. 

96.  Results  of  Cotton  Experiments  in  1911. 

97.  A  preliminary  report  on  Rice  Growing  in  the  Sacramento  Valley. 

98.  Peanut  Butter. 

99.  A  Method  for  the  Determination  of  the  Specific  Gravity  of  Wheat  and 

Other  Cereals. 

100.  Distribution  of  Seeds  and  Plants  by  the  Department  of  Agriculture. 

101.  The  Germination  of  Racketed  Vegetable  Seeds, 

102.  The  Production  of  Hairy  Vetch  Seed. 

DOCUMENTS. 

[In  applying  for  these  publications  the  name  of  the  bureau  as  well  as  the  number  of  the 
publication  should  be  given,   as  "  Bureau  of  Plant  Industry,  Document  355."] 

Doc.  355.  A-52.  Economize !    Cut  Down  the  Expenses  of  the  Farm. 

747.  A-67.  Revised.    The  Selection  of  Cotton  and  Com  Seed  for  Southern 
Farms. 

503.  A-68.  Fall  Breaking  and  the  Preparation  of  the  Seed  Bed. 
523.  A-69.  Field    Instructions    for    Farmers'    Cooperative   Demonstration 
Work. 

619.  A-71.  The  Production  of  Cotton  Under  Boll-Weevil  Conditions. 

631.  A-72.  Farm  Fertilizers. 

632.  A-73.  Crops  for  Southern  Farms. 

644,  A-74.  Revised.    Boys'  Demonstration  Work:  The  Com  Clubs. 

741.  A-75.  Revised.    Results  of  Boys'  Demonstration  Work  in  Cora  Clubs 

In  1911. 
692.  A-77.  Farm  Fertilizers. 

706.  A-78.  An  Effective  Method  for  Preventing  the  Erosion  of  Hill  Lands. 
730.  A-80.  The  Com  Crop  in  the  Southern  States. 
433.  Directions  for  Making  Window  Gardens. 

438.  Cooperative   Distribution    of   New    Varieties   of    Smyrna    Figs    and 
Caprifigs. 


PUBLICATIONS   OF  BUBEAU   OF  PLANT  INDUSTBY.  7" 

Doc.  452.  Hints  to  Settlers  on  the  Minidoka  Project,  Idaho. 
457.  Agricultural  Conditions  in  Southern  Texas. 
535.  Distribution  of  Cotton  Seed  in  1910. 

537.  Cooperative  Distribution  of  New  Varieties  of  Smyrna  Figs  and  Capri- 
figs.     (Second  Revision.) 

578.  Suggestions  for  Settling  Permanent  Pastures  with  Bermuda  Grass  as 
the  Basis. 

648.  The  Control  of  Cotton  Wilt  and  Root-Knot. 

676.  The  Relation  of  Handling  to  Decay  in  California  Navel   Oranges- 
Season  1910-11.  ' 

716.  Distribution  of  Cotton  Seed  in  1912. 
756.  Emergency  Crops  for  Overflowed  Lands  in  the  Mississippi  Valley. 

FARMERS'  BULLETINS. 

^'^^Iri^ult'Srf    ThP^fLn^owfn/nl^''',^^  ,°i  P^P"',^'"  featlses  issued  by  the  Department  of 
Plant  Tndnstrv%w^^^^^^  Contributed  by  the  Bureau  of 

iMant  Industry.     They  should  be  applied  for  by  number,  as  "  Farmers'  Bulletin  No. 

F.  B.    27.  Flax  for  Seed  and  Fiber. 

30.  Grape  Diseases  on  the  Pacific  Coast. 

91.  Potato  Diseases  and  Treatment. 
101.  Millets. 
113.  The  Apple  and  How  to  Grow  It. 

139.  Emmer :   A  Grain  for  the  Semiarid  Regions. 

140.  Pineapple  Growing. 

154.  The  Home  Fruit  Garden :   Preparation  and  Care. 
157.  The  Propagation  of  Plants. 
164.  Rape  as  a  Forage  Crop. 
167.  Cassava. 

174.  Broom  Corn. 

175.  Home  Manufacture  and  Use  of  Unfermented  Grape  Juice. 

176.  Cranberry  Culture. 
181.  Pruning, 

185.  Beautifying  the  Home  Grounds. 
188.  Weeds  Used  in  Medicine. 

194.  Alfalfa  Seed. 

195.  Annual  Flowering  Plants. 
198.  Strawberries. 

204.  The  Cultivation  of  Mushrooms. 
213.  Raspberries. 

218.  The  School  Garden. 

219.  Lessons  from  the  Grain-Rust  Epidemic  of  1904. 

220.  Tomatoes. 

221.  Fungous  Diseases  of  the  Cranberry. 
224.  Canadian  Field  Peas. 

229.  The  Production  of  Good  Seed  Corn. 

231.  Spraying  for  Cucumber  and  Melon  Diseases. 

232.  Okra :   Its  Culture  and  Uses. 

238.  Citrus  Fruit  Growing  in  the  Gulf  States. 

242.  An  Example  of  Model  Farming. 

243.  Fungicides  and  Their  Use  in  Preventing  Diseases  of  Fruits. 

245.  Renovation  of  Worn-Out  Soils. 

246.  Saccharine  Sorghums  for  Forage. 
248.  The  Lawn. 


8  PUBUCATIONS  OP  BUREAU  OP  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

F.  B.  250.  The  Prevention  of  Stinking  Smut  of  Wheat  and  Loose  Smut  of  Oata. 

253.  The  Germination  of  Seed  C!om. 

254.  Cucumbers. 

256.  The  Home  Vegetable  Garden. 

271.  Forage-Crop  Practlsos  In  Western  Oregon  and  Western  Washington. 

272.  A  Successful  Hog  and  Seed-Corn  Farm. 
274.  Flax  Culture. 

278.  I.«gumlnous  Crops  for  Green  Manuring. 

279.  A  Method  of  Eradicating  Johnson  Grass.     ' 

280.  A  Profitable  Tenant  Dairy  Farm. 

282.  Celery. 

283.  Spraying  for  Apple  Diseases  and  the  Codling  Moth  In  the  Ozarks. 

284.  Insect  and  Fungous  Enemies  of  the  Grape  East  of  the  Rocky  Moun- 

tains. 

286.  Comparative  Value  of  Whole  Cotton  Seed  and  Cotton-Seed  Meal  In 

Fertilizing  Cotton. 
288.  Nonsaccharlne  Sorghums. 
280.  Beans. 

291,  Evaporation  of  Apples. 

292.  Cost  of  Filling  Silos. 

294.  Farm  Practice  in  the  Columbia  Basin  Uplands. 
299.  Diversified  Farming  Under  the  Plantation  System. 

301.  Home-Grown  Tea. 

302.  Sea  Island  Cotton. 

304.  Growing  and  Curing  Hops. 

306.  Dodder  in  Relation  to  Farm  Seeds. 

307.  Roselle:    Its  Culture  and  Uses. 

310.  A  Successful  Alabama  Diversification  Farm. 

312.  A  Successful  Southern  Hay  Farm. 

313.  Harvesting  and  Storing  Com. 
318.  Cowpeas. 

322.  Milo  as  a  Dry-Land  Grain  Crop. 

323.  Clover  Farming  on  the  Sandy  Jack-Pine  Lands  of  the  North. 

324.  Sweet  Potatoes. 

325.  Small  Farms  in  the  Com  Belt. 

326.  Building  up  a  Run-Down  Cotton  Plantation. 
331.  Forage  Crops  for  Hogs  in  Kansas  and  Oklahoma. 
333.  Cotton  Wilt. 

337.  Cropping  Systems  for  New  England  Dairy  Farms. 
339.  Alfalfa. 

343.  The  Cultivation  of  Tobacco  in  Kentucky  and  Tennessee. 
347.  The  Repair  of  Farm  Equipment. 

354.  Onion  Culture. 

355.  A  Successful  Poultry  and  Dairy  Farm. 

357.  Methods  of  Poultry  Management  at  the  Maine  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station. 

361.  Meadow  Fescue:   Its  Culture  and  Uses. 

362.  Conditions  Affecting  the  Value  of  Market  Hay. 

364.  A  Profitable  Cotton  Farm. 

365.  Farm  Management  in  Northern  Potato-Growing  Sections. 
368.  The  Eradication  of  Bindweed,  or  Wild  Moming-Glory. 
370.  Replanning  a  Farm  for  Profit. 

372.  Soy  Beana 

380.  The  Loco- Weed  Disease. 


PUBLICATIONS   OF  BUKEAU   OF   PLANT  INDUSTRY.  9 

F.  B.  382.  The  Adulteration  of  Forage-Plant  Seeds. 

386.  Potato  Culture  on  Irrigated  Farms  of  the  West. 
395.  Sixty-Day  and  Kherson  Oats. 

398.  Farm  Practice  in  the  Use  of  Commercial  Fertilizers  in  the  South 
Atlantic  States.    ■ 

400.  A  More  Profitable  Corn-Planting  Method. 

401.  The  Protection  of  Orchards  in  the  Pacific  Northwest  from  Si)ring 

Frosts  by  Means  of  Fires  and  Smudges. 

402.  Canada  Bluegrass :  Its  Culture  and  Uses. 

406.  Soil  Conservation. 

407.  The  Potato  as  a  Truck  Crop. 

414.  Com  Culture. 

415.  Seed  Corn.  , 

416.  The  Production  of  Cigar-Leaf  Tobacco  In  Pennsylvania. 

417.  Rice  Culture. 

420.  Oats:  Distribution  and  Uses. 

422.  Demonstration  Work  on  Southern  Farms. 

424.  Oats:  Growing  the  Crop. 

426.  Canning  Peaches  on  the  Farm. 

427.  Barley  Culture  in  the  Southern  States. 

428.  Testing  Farm  Seeds  in  the  Home  and  in  the  Rural  School. 

431.  The  Peanut. 

432.  How  a  City  Family  Managed  a  Farm. 

433.  Cabbage. 

434.  The  Home  Production  of  Onion  Seed  and  Sets. 

436.  Winter  Oats  for  the  South. 

437.  A  System  of  Tenant  Farming  and  Its  Results. 

440.  Spraying  Peaches  for  the  Control  of  Brown-Rot,  Scab,  and  CurculiOw 

441.  Lespedeza,  or  Japan  Clover. 
443.  Barley:  Growing  the  Crop. 

446.  The  Choice  of  Crops  for  Alkali  Land. 
448.  Better  Grain-Sorghum  Crops. 

454.  A  Successful  New  York  Farm. 

455.  Red  Clover. 

458.  The  Best  Two  Sweet  Sorghums  for  Forage. 

460.  Frames  as  a  Factor  in  Truck  Growing. 

462.  The  Utilization  of  Logged-Off  Land  for  Pasture  in  Western  Oregon 

and  Western  Washington. 
464.  The  Eradication  of  Quack-Grass. 

466.  Winter  Emmer. 

467.  The  Control  of  the  Chestnut-Bark  Disease. 

471.  Grape  Propagation,  Pruning,  and  Training. 

472.  Systems  of  Farming  in  Central  New  Jersey. 
475.  Ice  Houses. 

482.  The  Pear  and  How  to  Grow  it 

483.  The  Thomless  Prickly  Pears. 
485.  Sweet  Clover. 

488.  Diseases  of  Cabbage  and  Related  Crops  and  Their  Control. 

489.  Two  Dangerous  Imported  Plant  Diseases. 

491.  The  Profitable  Management  of  the  Small  Apple  Orchard  on  the  Gen- 

eral Farm. 

492.  The  More  Important  Insect  and  Fungous  Enemies  of  the  Fruit  and 

Foliage  of  the  Apple. 
494.  Lawns  and  Lawn  Soils. 


10  PUBUCATI0N8  OP  BUREAU  OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

F.  B.  495.  Alfalfa  Seed  Production. 

001.  Cotton  Improvement  Under  Weevil  Conditions. 

002.  Timothy  Production  on  Irrigated  I^nd  In  the  Northwestern  States. 

007.  The  Smuts  of  Wheat,  Oats,  Barley,  and  Com. 

008.  Market  Hay. 

009.  Forage  Crops  for  the  Cotton  Region. 
Oil.  Farm  Bookkeeping. 

SEPARATE  REPRINTS  FROM  THE  YEARBOOK. 

[In  applying  for  these  separates  the  number  should  be  given,  as  "Yearbook  Seoarate 

No.  47."] 

Ybk.  Sep.    47.  Sninll  Fruit  Culture  for  Market. 

89.  Grass  and  Forage  Experiment  Station  at  Garden  City,  Kans., 

and  Cooperative  Branch  Stations  In  the  South. 

90.  Division  of  Agrostology. 

203.  Commercial  Plant  Introduction. 

206,  Poisonous  Plants  of  Northern  Stock  Ranges. 

266.  Top  Working  Orchard  Trees. 

330.  Promising  New  Fruits. 

354.  Some  Uses  of  the  Grapevine  and  Its  Fruit. 

361.  Cotton  Culture  In  Guatemala. 

387.  The  Handling  of  Fruit  for  Transportation. 

399.  Promising  New  Fruits. 

401.  Progress  in  Drug-Plant  Cultivation. 

419.  Range  Management. 

450.  Promising  New   Fruits. 

453.  The  Status  of  the  American  T^mon  Industry. 

463.  Diseases  of  Ornamental  Trees. 

483.  The  Causes  of  Southern  Rural  Conditions  and  the  Small  Farm  as 

an  Important  Remedy. 
487.  Types  of  Farming  In  the  United  States. 

490.  Intensive  Methods  and  Systematic  Rotation  of  Crops  In  Tobacco 

Culture. 
496.  Promising  New  Fruits. 

501.  The  Farmers'  Cooperative  Demonstration  Work. 
003.  Conditions  Influencing  the  Production  of  Sugar-Beet  Seed  In  the 

United  States. 

009.  Farming  as  an  Occupation  for  City-Bred  Men. 

015.  Progress  In  Methods  of  Producing  Higher  Yielding  Strains  of 
Com. 

020.  The  Handling  of  Deciduous  Fruits  on  the  Pacific  Coast. 
530.  Nitrogen  Gathering  Plants. 

540.  Increased  Yields  of  Com  from  Hybrid  Seed. 

541.  The  Utilization  of  Crop  Plants  for  Paper  Making. 
546.  Cooperation  In  the  Handling  and  Marketing  of  Fruits. 
549.  Promising  New  Fruits. 

050.  The  Precoollng  of  Fruit. 

551.  Camphor  Cultivation  in  the  United  States. 

556.  Seaman  Asabel   Knapp. 

060.  Fibers  Used  for  Binder  Twine. 

565.  Some  Misconceptions  Concerning  Dry  Farming. 

567.  Seasonal  Distribution  of  Labor  on  the  Farm. 

068.  Some  Results  of  the  Farmers'  Cooperative  Demonstration  Work. 


PUBLICATIONS  OF  BUREAU   OP  PLANT  INDUSTBY.  H 

Ybk.  Sep,  572,  Rotations  in  the  Com  Belt, 

574.  The  Water  Economy  of  Dry-Land  Crops, 

579,  Cotton  Improvement  on  a  Community  Basis. 

580,  Plant  Introduction  for  the  Plant  Breeder, 

581,  Promising  New  Fruits. 

DIVISION    OF    BOTANY. 
INVENTORIES.* 

Inventory  1.  Foreign  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  by  the  Section  of  Seed  and 
Plant  Introduction.    Numbers  1-1000, 

Inventory  2.  Foreign  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  by  the  Section  of  Seed  and 
Plant  Introduction.     Numbers  1001-1900. 

Inventory  5.  Foreign  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  by  the  Department  of  Agri- 
culture, and  for  Distribution  through  the  Section  of  Seed  and  Plant  Introduc- 
tion.    Numbers  1901-2700. 

Inventory  6.  Foreign  Seeds  and  Plants  Collected  in  Austria,  Italy,  and  Egypt. 

Inventory  7.  Foreign  Seeds  and  Plants  Imported  by  the  Department  of  Agri- 
culture, through  the  Section  of  Seed  and  Plant  Introduction,  for  Distribution 
oTA?°Qi!^^*^^°^  ^^^^  *^®  ^^^^  Agricultural  Experiment  Stations.    Numbers 

DIVISION    OF    VEGETABLE    PHYSIOLOGY    AND    PATHOLOGY. 
JOURNAL  OF  MYCOLOGY, 

[Devoted  especiaUy  to  the  study  of  fungi  in  their  relation  to  plant  diseases.] 

l""]-  II'  S""-  ?•  ^^^-  ^"'  ^^-  ^-  Vol.  VII,  No.  3. 

Vol.  VI,  No,  4.  Vol.  VII,  No.  2.  Vol,  VII,  No.  4. 

1  For  later  numbers  see  Bureau  of  Plant  Industry  bulletins. 

o 


WASHINGTON  :  GOVERNMENT  PRINTING  OFFICE  :  1912 


A     001  102  697     8 


